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Mesophotic corals in Hawai'i maintain autotrophy to survive low-light conditions.

Callum Hoyt BackstromJacqueline L Padilla-GamiñoHeather L SpaldingMelissa S RothCelia M SmithRuth D GatesLisa J Rodrigues
Published in: Proceedings. Biological sciences (2024)
In mesophotic coral ecosystems, reef-building corals and their photosynthetic symbionts can survive with less than 1% of surface irradiance. How depth-specialist corals rely upon autotrophically and heterotrophically derived energy sources across the mesophotic zone remains unclear. We analysed the stable carbon ( δ 13 C) and nitrogen ( δ 15 N) isotope values of a Leptoseris community from the 'Au'au Channel, Maui, Hawai'i (65-125 m) including four coral host species living symbiotically with three algal haplotypes. We characterized the isotope values of hosts and symbionts across species and depth to compare trophic strategies. Symbiont δ 13 C was consistently 0.5‰ higher than host δ 13 C at all depths. Mean colony host and symbiont δ 15 N differed by up to 3.7‰ at shallow depths and converged at deeper depths. These results suggest that both heterotrophy and autotrophy remained integral to colony survival across depth. The increasing similarity between host and symbiont δ 15 N at deeper depths suggests that nitrogen is more efficiently shared between mesophotic coral hosts and their algal symbionts to sustain autotrophy. Isotopic trends across depth did not generally vary by host species or algal haplotype, suggesting that photosynthesis remains essential to Leptoseris survival and growth despite low light availability in the mesophotic zone.
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